During growth spurts - around 6 weeks after birth — your newborn might want to be fed more often ||The more you help your toddler put his feelings into words (“I’m mad. I want the truck.” “I’m sad. I can’t find my bear.”), the less they will show aggressive behaviour. ||Your toddler may be clumsy simply due to her trials to master so many new physical skills at the same time. The more active she is, the more likely she will drop things, run into things, or fall down. ||Expressing milk should be painless. If it hurts, stop. ||Make a habit out of drinking a glass of water every time you feed your baby. ||Presumably, your baby won't recall events from his life before age 3. Still, these early experiences outline his vision of the world ||Use a firm mattress and avoid placing your baby on thick, fluffy padding that may interfere with breathing if your baby's face presses against it ||Whenever possible, don't get involved in your kids' clash. Step in only if there's a danger of physical harm. ||Always keep the number of Poison Centre posted beside your phone ||2- Breastfeeding your new baby ...Breast milk provides all the nutrients that babies need for the first six months of their life and guards against many illnesses and allergies. Also, breastfeeding can help build a special closeness with your baby. Breastfeeding is one of the best things you can do for your baby. ||
Healthy Habits for TV, Video Games and Internet

 

Television, video games and internet have a strong influence on the lives of most families. But too much screen time can have unhealthy side effects. Here are some practical ways to make kids' screen time more productive.

TV Time

The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommends that kids under age 2 have no screen time, and that kids older than 2 watch no more than 1 to 2 hours a day of quality programming. Limit the number of TV-watching hours:
 - Keep TVs out of kids' bedrooms.
 - Stock the room in which you have your TV with plenty of other non-screen entertainment (books, kids' magazines, toys, puzzles, board games, etc.)
 - Turn off the TV during meals.
 - Don't allow your child to watch TV while doing homework.
 - Treat TV as a privilege that kids need to earn — not a right that they're entitled to. 

Set a good example. Limit your own TV viewing.

Use age-group ratings if available and use parental control tools.

Watch TV with your kids when you can. Co-viewing allows you to discuss the show with them, and if something inappropriate is shown or said, you can point out that it is something that doesn’t meet your family’s standards. You can use TV to explain confusing situations and express your feelings about difficult topics (sex, love, drugs, alcohol, smoking, work, behavior, discrimination).

Preview programs. Make sure you think they're appropriate before your kids watch them.

Offer fun alternatives to television like playing a board game, starting a game of hide and seek, playing outside, reading, etc.

Video and Interactive Computer Games

Look at the ratings. Video games do have ratings to indicate when they have violence, strong language, mature sexual themes, and other content that may be inappropriate for kids.

Preview the games. Even with the ratings, it's still important to preview the games — or even play them — before letting kids play.

Monitor how the games are affecting your kids. If they seem more aggressive after spending time playing a certain game, discuss the game and help them understand how the violence that's portrayed is different from what occurs in the real world

Internet Safety

Become computer literate. Learn how to block objectionable material.

Keep the computer in a common area. Avoid putting a computer in a child's bedroom.

Share an email account with younger children. That way, you can monitor who is sending them messages.

Bookmark your child's favorite sites. Your child will have easy access and be less likely to browse into inappropriate content.

Spend time online together. Teach your kids appropriate online behavior.

Monitor kids use of chat rooms. Be aware that posting messages to chat rooms reveals a child's email address to others.

Find out about online protection elsewhere. Find out what, if any, online protection is offered at school, after-school centers, friends' homes, or any place where kids could use a computer without your supervision

 

Source

kidshealth

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